Bad Wizard

Although the differences between Bad Wizard and the aforementioned Keane are voluminous enough to fill several sets of encyclopedias, they share at least one major characteristic: a fundamental lack of originality. But unlike Keane, whose members clearly aspire to pop-music immortality, the Wizards, appearing alongside 3 Inches of Blood and…

Skeleton Witch

Even though Metallica dragged thrashy speed metal into the mainstream with its “Black” album, most of the better, more imaginative practitioners of the style remained relatively obscure. While acts such as Testament, Voivod and Metal Church never became household names, their mixture of aggression, precision and obsession with the dark…

Mates of State

Nick and Jessica. Eminem and Kim. Brad and Jennifer. Jeepers, isn’t there one celebrity couple around that can stay together for the long haul? Oh, right, there’s San Francisco lovebirds Kori Gardner and Jason Hammel, aka Mates of State. They’re bigwigs in the indie-rock universe who have been together for…

Get Him Eat Him

Get Him Eat Him is the latest purveyor of the jittery, keyboard-laden pop that will hopefully someday replace emo as the soundtrack for angsty teenagers everywhere. With so much more to say than hackneyed harangues concerning shallow love gone wrong, Get Him Eat Him’s bubbly, buoyant songs employ a refreshing…

Billy Idol

You gotta wonder if maybe Billy Idol invested in the patenting of hair gel, since there are few who’ve done as much to bolster its sales as he has. The only time he veered from his trademark peroxide-blond spikes was in ’93, for his techno-informed Cyberpunk, and the dreadlocks that…

Skivies

The art-damaged psychedelia perpetrated by the infamous Butthole Surfers is pretty much impossible to imitate. No one who’s seen the band live has ever been the same after experiencing the maddening sonic onslaught and disturbing projections. The Skivies (due at 15th Street Tavern this Friday, August 4, alongside Action Friend…

DJ Skribble

DJ Skribble (slated to appear at the Church this Thursday, August 3) began his career in the early ’90s as a member of Young Black Teenagers, a tongue-in-cheek hip-hop crew whose Top 10 hit, “Tap the Bottle,” landed it on a tour with Public Enemy and Primus. As a hip-hop…

No Sale

As World Cup fever was reaching a boil, Ian Parton, the musical player-coach of Brighton, England’s Go! Team, was contacted by Nike about using one of his group’s songs in a soccer-themed television spot. He admits that the concept was pretty benign — just a montage of clips showing famous…

She’s All That — And More

Last week I had the great misfortune of suffering through the first two episodes of The One: Making a Music Star, which is well on its way to becoming reality television’s Ishtar. A mutant hybrid of American Idol (natch) and Making the Band that pits eleven contenders against each other…

Shine On

It’s impossible to overstate Jeremy Enigk’s influence on indie rock over the past decade. Sunny Day Real Estate, the Seattle-based quartet he fronted, was at the vanguard of the mid-’90s emo scene, inspiring countless disciples. With a sound that took the intensity of hardcore and infused it with soaring melodies,…

Mo’ Substance

Mr. Lif is a throwback to a time when MCs rapped about things that mattered. So it should come as no surprise that Lif, aka Jeffrey Haynes, often cites Chuck D, Rakim and KRS-ONE as his primary influences. As commercial rap continues to devolve into something resembling the World Wrestling…

Golden Smog

Golden Smog, a group featuring moonlighters from several rock and roots combos, has lingered for a long time, particularly by side-project standards. On Golden Smog, an amusingly sloppy EP, arrived circa 1992, with two enjoyable full-lengths following in 1995 and 1998, respectively. There’s been plenty of radio silence since then,…

New York Dolls

Inventing punk must have been a dirty job. You had to make up new rules for the guitar, cram your hairy appendages into ladies’ pumps and lingerie, get hooked on hard drugs and squeeze Howlin’ Wolf and the Shangri-Las into the same three minutes. That routine shortened the lives of…

Boozoo Bajou

Compilations like Juke Joint II are the DiGiorno of mixes, culled with such impeccable taste of inspiring breadth that it sounds like your music-obsessive friend could be mixing it live in your living room. Normally, buying such mixes seems like a lazy shortcut; if the groups are good, you buy…

Dashboard Confessional

Contrary to popular belief, Dashboard Confessional frontman Chris Carrabba is one of the ballsiest men in music. That statement might seem absurd, considering that…well, he’s Chris Carrabba, for chrissake. But during the first part of the decade, when critics and other musicians were busy distancing themselves from emo’s fallout, the…

Adenbrooke

On Coming Up to Sunshine, Adenbrooke has melded equal parts punk attitude, alternative apathy and hardcore noise to create a sound that can best be described as post-mall rock. The six songs that make up Sunshine center on the transition from adolescence to adulthood and the confusion that brings. The…

Ten Tiers

On the de facto title track of Ten Tiers’ latest, group leader Jonathan Tiersten sings about slipping “into the comforts of drunkenness” — an appropriate phrase, given the intriguingly woozy, off-kilter tenor of the EP as a whole. The disc stumbles at times, but somehow manages to remain upright. Take…

Listen Up

Body Count, Murder 4 Hire (Escapi Music). Fourteen years after infuriating law enforcement by releasing “Cop Killer” — ironic, considering that Ice-T wound up playing a cop on Law and Order: SVU — Body Count is back. The musical formula is the same, but this time war, rather than the…

Carla Bozulich’s Evangelista

Few artists have ventured on as varied a path as Carla Bozulich. Emerging from Los Angeles’s post-punk scene during the ’80s, Bozulich was a member of the industrial dance act Ethyl Meatplow and, later, the more famous and rootsy Geraldine Fibbers. When the latter group disbanded in the late ’90s,…

Daniel Powter

I’ve had a bad day. Actually, this particular “Bad Day” has lasted more than five months, repeating over and over and over again, like Groundhog Day. It started back in February, when I was flying to Los Angeles on a plane that had those little TVs installed on the backs…

Margot & the Nuclear So and So’s

Yeah, I know: terrible band name. But don’t let a lousy handle prevent you from discovering Margot & the Nuclear So and So’s. This Indianapolis-based outfit is typically lumped into the folk genre — a classification that falls well short of describing the material on their latest disc, The Dust…

Yellowcard

Yellowcard belongs to the very exclusive club of emo-leaning pop-punk bands that are named after soccer violations and feature a violinist who does on-stage backflips. Gymnastics aside, though, the presence of Sean Mackin (the Itzhak Perlman of the Warped Tour set) is hardly a gimmick; his adroit bow-handling adds buckets…